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December 12, 2025

Will the New Labour Codes Reduce In-Hand Salary?

The CSR Journal Magazine

Worries about reduced salaries following the introduction of the new Labour Codes have been putting salaried workers on edge. The Union Labour Ministry has now clarified that for the majority of employees, monthly take-home pay will remain unaffected, provided provident fund (PF) deductions continue to follow the statutory ceiling of Rs 15,000.

“The new Labour Codes do not reduce take-home pay if PF deduction is on statutory wage ceiling. PF deductions remain based on the wage ceiling of Rs 15,000 and contributions beyond this limit are voluntary, not mandatory,” the ministry said in a post on X.

Concerns arose after the new rules mandated that basic pay and similar components must now account for at least 50% of total wages. Many feared that this change would automatically raise PF contributions, shrinking their in-hand salaries.

However, the ministry emphasised that PF is only calculated on the statutory ceiling of Rs 15,000. So, even if an employee’s basic pay rises under the new definition, PF deductions remain unchanged unless the employee and employer voluntarily decide to contribute a higher amount.

PF Deductions Unchanged for Rs 60,000 Salary Under New Labour Code

For instance, an employee earning Rs 60,000 monthly, with Rs 20,000 as basic pay and dearness allowance and Rs 40,000 as allowances, would still have a PF deduction of Rs 1,800 from both employer and employee. Take-home pay would remain Rs 56,400, unchanged from before the new codes.

The revised rules also cap allowances at 50% of total wages. Any excess gets added back into statutory wage calculations, but PF contributions still follow the Rs 15,000 ceiling unless voluntarily increased.

The government highlighted that the aim of these changes is clarity and fairness. Earlier, companies sometimes kept basic pay low and routed salaries into allowances to reduce statutory payouts for PF, gratuity, and pension.

Officials pointed out, “Only if the employer and employee decide to contribute PF on actual wages above Rs 15,000 will take-home pay reduce, but this is voluntary and can help build higher retirement savings.”

PF Ceiling Hike? Unions Demand Boost

Labour unions have long called for a higher statutory PF ceiling, last revised in 2014 from Rs 6,500 to Rs 15,000. Raising it could boost retirement benefits but may also impact monthly salaries.

While PF deductions are unlikely to reduce take-home pay for most employees, other factors like gratuity contributions or leave encashment adjustments could still influence net salary.

In essence, for the bulk of salaried workers, the new Labour Codes bring transparency without shrinking in-hand pay, while giving employees the choice to contribute more toward their future retirement benefits.

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